Earlier this month, when it was announced that Tinted Windows—an ostensibly-super-group featuring Fountains of Wayne's Adam Schlesinger, The Smashing Pumpkins' James Iha, Cheap Trick's Bun E. Carlos and Taylor Hanson (for whom my inner twelve-year old still carries a brooding, awkward torch)—didn't just exist but indeed had songs and a MySpace and SXSW dates (you know, all the things that real bands have) I thought it must be a joke. When I watched the promotional video I became reasonably sure that it wasn't a joke, but even more desperate to be wrong: The songs were tinny and vapid and somehow more insufferable than the video's creepy host, and seemed sure to draw the ire of the now-grown-up versions of all the kids who so fiercely mocked me for my Hanson-love in middle school.
Still, I sense that much of the band's appeal right now is the strange notion of Taylor Hanson as a glowy-faced rockstar making somewhat exciting music—which would indeed be shocking if you, like many, wrote off him and his brothers as mindless bubblegum pablum circa summer '97. Anyone who stuck around, though, knows that Hanson's catalog is hardly limited to the earwormy madness of "MMMBop." From Middle of Nowhere, the brothers' platinum debut—on which the trio wrote or co-wrote and played instruments on all the songs, all before then-thirteen-year-old Taylor's voice had even cracked—to their most recent album, 2007's The Walk, track after giddy, soulful pop-rock track blows Tinted Window's as-yet-sparse offerings right out of the water. Here are fourteen of the best, compiled with help from my fellow resident Hanson apologist, associate editor Kate Kiefer.
1. "A Minute Without You" (Middle of Nowhere, 1997)
Older brother Isaac, usually relegated to harmonies and guitar duties, was given this one moment to shine on the band's Mercury Records debut. "MMMBop" and "Weird" were my favorite tracks at the time, but this one had aged a little more gracefully.
2. "If Only" (This Time Around, 2000)
Taylor does the "tortured crush" thing really, really well, and perhaps nowhere better than this bouncy song. That's John Popper of Blues Traveler lending some really frantic harmonica to the proceedings. (Shut up—you love Four, too.)
3. "This Time Around"
One of my very last acts as a dedicated, active Hanson fan was to obsessively call my local radio station and request this song every evening during the week it was a contender in the station's nightly "battle of the hits." I was in the 9th grade. One of my awkward exchanges with the DJ was broadcast on-air, with my name and everything; I'm still hoping no one at school heard it.
4. "Runaway Run"
Cars frontman Ric Ocasek was briefly drafted to produce This Time Around, and though he was eventually bumped from the project, his brief involvement might explain why this song's opening guitar riff sounds almost exactly like that of "My Best Friend's Girl." I don't necessarily consider this a bad thing.
5. "In the City"
A pretty intense little freakout. MMMparanoid, much?
6. "A Song to Sing"
No Tinted Windows song will ever get this earnest, so bust out the lighters and sway along while you can. Sing it, bros. Sing it.
7. "Wake Up" (Princess Diaries Soundtrack, 2001)
That little mandolin riff is just as brief and glorious as Robert Schwartzman's acting career. Oh, swoon.
8. "Penny & Me" (Underneath, 2004)
Sweet odes to girls with singable names was Hanson's stock and trade early on, though they've largely given up the ghost after all getting married and commencing to pop out babies. Still, they went out on top with this one, their would-be comeback hit and probably their best single to date.
9. "Get Up And Go"
The line "she'll work it out until she makes the tips" was enough to have me convinced for years that this song was about a stripper. I was very wrong, so the song's a bit less scandalous than I once thought—but no less catchy.
10. "Hey"
An early visit from the bleach-blonde, pleather-clad, rocker-chick muse that would later descend upon Tinted Windows.
11. "I Will Come To You" (Middle of Nowhere and Best of Hanson Live & Electric)
This is Kate's favorite. The 1997 original is sweet, but has a really schlocky synthetic drum beat; this live version is much better, though it admittedly lacks the weirdness of a thirteen-year-old boy singing about dying souls. Listen to those screams!
12. "Rock N Roll Razorblade"
Despite the unfortunate, goofy lyrical association with rollerblading, this song is a pretty solid flip-off of the major-label music industry machine that kinda chewed Hanson up and spit 'em out barely alive in the early '00s. More satisfying than their documentary on the same subject, to be sure.
13. "Go"
This is the band's first single to feature younger brother Zac on lead vocals. "Go if you want to go / stay if you want to know"—leave it to these guys to deliver pure ambivalence with such searing vocal passion. Weirdly, I've heard this song on multiple occassions at multiple Ross Dress For Less locations. I don't know what that means.
14. "Blue Sky"
Hanson may very well have written my favorite U2 song of the past ten years. [Insert "Oh, snap!" here.]


You should really check out their two documentaries if you get a chance. Motivated me enough to go out and BUY their newest CD.
I think most of these are good choices. However, "Lost Without Each Other" is far better than a few of these. "A Minute Without You" is and has always been the best song on Middle of Nowhere. It should have been a single.
I suggest you give Tinted Windows some breathing room. Not many new bands stand up to immediate scrutiny the way they have. I went to two of their shows at SXSW and there were some people there who were obviously skeptical and ended up clapping along within a few songs and yelling things like "hell yeah!" at the end of them.
Good compilation I like the If only..
Good Hanson compilation, but I think you're a bit harsh on Tinted Windows. This new band's music has many of the exhilerating qualities that I found so appealing in Hanson's early music. Interestingly, many people have argued against Hanson's music to me, using the same terms you use in this blog to dismiss Tinted Windows.
I'd add "Every Word I Say" to the mix. The first time I heard it Isaac introduced it as, "A song about not telling go" and Taylor followed with, "this is a song about passion". This song moves me like no other. Also, "Been There Before", and "Fire On The Mountain" off The Walk are excellent. If you can find them - search www.takethewalk.net and youtube - look for "Lay Me Down" and "Follow Your Lead" off the Take the Walk ep - associated with their work in Africa. Incredibly powerful songs on both counts.
Rumblefish, you're right-- "Lost Without Each Other" should have been on the list. Not sure how I forgot that one.
Alice, what differentiates Hanson and Tinted Windows for me, at least, besides the really really strong nostalgic ties, is the degree of sincerity-- what I loved about Hanson when I was 12 and what I still like now is how much genuine heart is evident in the music, for better or for worse. The Tinted Windows songs, so far, really feel lacking in that department-- they're fun, but feel pretty generic to me. Waiting to be proven wrong, though.
Well, Rachel, I don't find Tinted Windows music insincere at all. And I find it full to the brim with joy and energy, which is what I find missing in a lot of other music these days.
At any rate... if this blog was meant to persuade those that have recently discovered Tinted Windows to try Hanson's music, I think you might have been a lot more successful had you not been so dismissive of Tinted Windows. I find it rather off-putting, and I'm a Hanson fan.
This article is great! Maybe not my choice of Hanson songs necessarily (no Been There Before? No Underneath? No Radiohead cover?? The latter normally messes with people's heads!) I pretty much agree with everything in this article though, especially the 'Song To Sing' description, haha...
And Juliette, I wish Hanson would lose the cringe-o lines when they are introducing their songs. 'Every Word I Say' is a great song, but why not just let it speak for itself? I would play everybody 'In A Little While' for example, if it didn't have Taylor using the words "taking passion to the very bleeding edge" when he introduces it... SHUT UP, TAYLOR!! JUST PLAY THE DAMN SONG!
i wasn't too happy with hanson's previous release but hanson's newest album The Walk is all a masterpiece!!!!!!!!!
the Tinted Windows single is about 80 percent better than I expected it to be. Not sure about these Hanson songs but there is some good stuff in there. who knew?
"I would play everybody 'In A Little While' for example, if it didn't have Taylor using the words "taking passion to the very bleeding edge" when he introduces it... SHUT UP, TAYLOR!! JUST PLAY THE DAMN SONG!" - a DIFFERENT Alice
Exactly! I cringe every time I hear him say that. I really wish there were an equally good recording of the song out there so that I could listen to that one instead.
Davin- Who knew there was some good stuff in the Hanson catalogue? Why, everyone who gave them a listen in the past 12 years.
Completely agree on No. 7. You couldn't have said it better. Sidenote: Man, I miss Robert Schwartzman... I mean, Carmine... no wait, it's Schwartzman again. :)
I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don't know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.
Miriam
http://www.craigslistguide.info
I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don't know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.
Ruth
http://fendisite.com
I think you're looking at Tinted Windows all wrong. I've been a Hanson fan for forever and I was a little skeptical when I first heard of this hodge podge of artists coming together. But a big problem that Hanson fans have with it is that the songs don't seem to have a deeper meaning. The songs aren't made for any other purpose than to make music and have fun with it.
You have to give Taylor a little slack, especially after writing the Take The Walk EP songs with his brothers. As good as those songs are, you can feel the anguish that went into writing them. I'm glad Taylor has found another creative outlet that allows him to let loose and have as much fun as he can possibly have. Not that he doesn't have fun with his brothers, but they've been veering towards a seriously sad side with everything they've been writing about lately.
I think the Tinted Windows album is filled with great catchy music with simple lyrics. It's just fun to listen to and sing along with.
P.S. I totally have the Taylor syndrome of having to say a lot to get out what I want to say. I wonder if there's a pill for that?